The flag was established by Bill No. 4 (P.L. 1979-1) of the Nirijela or
Parliament, dated 12 June 1979, approved by the High Commissioner (Adrian P.
Winkel) on 22 June 1979. Article One reads:

(1) DESIGN. The official Flag of the Marshall Islands shall be blue with
two contiguous trapezoidal bars extending from the lower left of the Flag,
diagonally across to the upper right of the Flag. The top bar shall be
orange, and the bottom bar shall be white. The union of the Flag, in the
upper left of the flag, shall be a white star of 24 points; the two points
which are parallel to the hoist and the two points which are parallel to the
fly shall be longer than the remaining 20 points. The points are 15 degrees apart.
The union is located equidistant from the left edge, the top edge and the orange bar.

Unfortunately however, the "official proportions" listed in Article Three do
not give a distance between the upper and lower corners of the flag and the
stripes, and give the width of the 'rays' at the fly as far wider than was
obviously intended (from a rather poor illustration of the flag which
accompanied the text but which was not included within the law itself).
None the less, it reads as follows:

(3) PROPORTIONS. The following are the official proportions for all flags
bearing the design of the official flag of the Marshall Islands:
Hoist of flag 1
Fly of flag 1.9
Outer union diameter, point to point .620
Inner union diameter, point to point .444
Diameter of inner circle of union .196
Width of white bar at left edge .16
Width of orange bar at left edge .16
Width of white bar at right edge .392
Width of orange bar at right edge .392

Christopher Southworth, 12 March 2004

A blue flag with two rising stripes orange above white widening towards the fly
and with a 24-rayed white sun, with four main rays larger then others. The ratio is obviously based on the US flag ratio.
Album des Pavillons 2000 provides relative ratios along the fly edge from top to bottom
as (3+20+20+57):190. [That is wrong, according to the figures above.]
Variations of this flag (erroneous) occasionally show the stripes emerging from
the bottom hoist corner.Željko Heimer, 13 June 2002

10:19, by Željko Heimer, 3 Maqy 2004

As Chris already pointed out, this description is missing two
important measures, and that is the size of the blue edge along hoist
below the white stripe, and size of the blue edge along fly above
orange stripe. There is no info on these sizes, but I believe that it
is reasonable to assume that the two are the same. Also, I make them
equal to the white and orange width at hoist, i.e. .16.
The dimensions given as .392 (Width of white/orange bar at right edge) just can't be right - if such they would cover
almost 80% of the fly edge, which is surely not as it was shown in
any image of this flag we ever seen. Most probably these figures were doubled (i.e. someone read the size
for both stripes, and the attached it to the one - not that unthinkable error),
so the correct figure should be .196. It should
be noticed that such figure is already used for an other element in
the flag (Diameter of inner circle of union), so the choice of that
size is making much more sense.
The union is stated (in the Decree) to be equidistant from the top
edge, hoist edge and the top edge of the orange stripe. This is most
conveniently shown as a circle concentric with the union tangent to
the three. (Using the units as above, that circle measures approximately .73.)Željko Heimer, 3 May 2004

The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics (Flags
and Anthems Manual London 2012) provides recommendations for national flag
designs. Each NOC was sent an image of the flag, including the PMS shades, for
their approval by LOCOG. Once this was obtained, LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cm
version of the flag for further approval. So, while these specs may not be the
official, government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the NOC
believed the flag to be. For Marshall Islands: PMS 287 blue, 152 yellow. The
vertical flag is simply the horizontal version turned 90 degrees clockwise.Ian Sumner, 11 October 2012

The deep blue background represents the Pacific Ocean. The white and orange
bands represent the Ratak (Sunrise) and Ralik (Sunset) chains, respectively.
The customary symbolism of orange as the color of bravery and white as
the color of peace are also recognized.
The star represents the cross of Christianity, with each of the 24
points signifying a municipal district of the Republic of Marshall Islands. The four main points
represent the major centers of Majuro, Ebeye, Jaluit and Wotje.
Lance Laack, 17 November 1995

DK Pocket Book has some differences in interpretation of the flag when
compared with Lance Laack: - the star is said to represent also the geographical
location of the archipelago, a few degrees above the Equator - the four
longer points of the star stand for the major centers of Majuro, Ebeye,
Jaluit and Wotje according to Lance, and for Majuro, Wotji, Jaluit and
Kwajalein according to DK Pocket Book. According to Encyclopaedia Universalis,
Marshall islands have 27 electoral districts, including 0 (for three of
them, so that we come back to the 24 points of the star!) to 19,664 inhabitants
for Majuro, the capital (followed by Kwajalein, 9,311 inh., Ailinglaplap,
1,715 inh., Jaluit, 1,709 inh. and Arno, 1,656 inh. Wotji has only 646
inh. - the stripes extend and widen upward as a sign of increase in growth
and vitality.

DK Pocket Book adds that flag was adopted when Marshall islands became
a self-governing territory on 1 May 1979. The flag was designed by Emlain
Kabua, the President's wife, and was chosen among 50 designs.
Ivan Sache, 29 May 2000

Orange or Red? Orange!

The World Encyclopedia of Flags states in the text 'orange', in the image
it's red... Eve Devereux (1998) in 'Identifying Flags' has 'orange-red' in the text
and orange on the image And Mucha (1985) has orange in the image
and text.
Jarig Bakker, 29 May 2000